Categories
internet tech

All I need … is a little RSSPECT!

RSSPECT is a new offering from Ryan North, allowing anybody on any site to serve up warm, savory feeds for their devoted readers. Its tagline is “Syndication made simple.” and it certainly seems to offer up the goods. Ryan, who previously released Oh No Robot, a free search engine service for webcomics, focuses his attention mainly on projects for the webcomics community. Even so, the products themselves are solid, and RSSPECT particularly is useful for any site that would like to offer RSS services.

With RSSPECT, all you have to do is add some markup tags to your website, and you can be syndicating your content instantly. There’s no fees, no programming, and no hassle. You don’t have to install any software, and you can create as many feeds as you want. We take the sucky parts out of RSS.

We’ll check your website automatically, and when there’s new content, it’ll be added to your RSS feed. You control what gets added to the feed and what doesn’t. And you can always log in to add, update, or delete posts by hand, if you want. You have complete control.

It doesn’t stop there. We give you the tools to publicize your feed automatically, and the code that allows your readers add your feed to their Google homepages, to their MSN accounts, to AOL, to Yahoo – the list goes on. We’ve done the hard work so you won’t have to.

Categories
internet news

The new ‘Times’

NYTimes.com, the online portal to the New York Times, wrote a letter to its readers on Sunday describing the redesign of their site. Among the new features are improved navigation and an up-to-the minute “most popular” section. Also added is a tab that takes you to articles as they appeared in the newspaper. In a word, their page has become more interactive, customizable, up-to-date, and functional. With all that function, I hope they don’t forget they have to keep posting news.

We also wanted to give our readers a greater voice and sprinkle a little more serendipity around the site by providing prominent links to a list of most e-mailed and blogged articles, most searched for information and popular movies. A new tab at the top of the page takes you directly to all our most popular features.

Categories
humor internet

This is just what Satan intended.

I love finding new websites, especially sites that provide even more fantastic links to rampantly further my internet browsing on a quiet Saturday afternoon. I’ll follow John’s example, since my birthday’s tomorrow; Argument #26:

ARGUMENT FROM INCOMPREHENSIBILITY
(1) Flabble glurk zoom boink blubba snurgleschnortz ping!
(2) No one has ever refuted (1).
(3) Therefore, God exists.

Yeah. If you’re not likely to be insulted by atheistic humor, you should check it out.

Categories
humor internet wordpress

Action figures sold separately.

I was a bit confused if the WordPress dev blog was playing an April Fool’s joke with their announcement of “Wordpattern”. Having read it over, I’m fairly convinced it’s a joke, but should note that I can tend to be unfortunately gullible, at times. In any case, here are some items of humor I came across while researching this “hoax(?)”.

Our groundbreaking, no-nonsense approach of creating a fast and lean CMSMS (CMS management system) is unparalleled and will fulfill the need of every user out there – we won’t be content with anything less.

A “Content Management Software Management System”? Awesome.

The Wordpattern features page has some choice tidbits:

4 Minute Install

The latest InstallMark™ benchmarks clock the WordPattern install process in at 3:47 – that’s a 25% improvement over WordPress 2.0, and a whopping 41% faster than Textpattern.

Gidgets

Like widgets, only cuter.

I think this marks the first time a web application benchmarked its install speed. I also like BJAX, Web2.1 (beta), and invisible URLs. The roadmap section is not to be missed, detailing Wordpattern’s “5 milestones” (the 5th being World Domination). I like the idea of “Tiger Teams”, as well as the Marketing and Evangelism Team. Also linked from the roadmap is Huhcorp, who they’re evidently working with. Their page is hilarious as well.

Our name will confuse you, but, you have to admit, the logo design is pretty cool. And we’re good at turning regular words into “e-words,” such as “e-consulting,” “e-business” or “e-sexual harassment.”

Our office is really modern and we’ve got nice computers and stuff. If you ever saw it, you’d say “Wow, cool office. These guys are legit.”

Following more links, to Huhcorp’s “ideas” page:

Our female staff members are all hot, so, even if there’s nothing to meet about, we’ll sit and flirt with them, and charge you for the time. When one of our new-age marketing gurus or design experts or consultants has an idea, the rest of us look at him or her with serious expressions and write stuff down on paper.

I’m really temped to quote their entire site, because I find it all completely awesome, but you should just go and check it out for yourself. The coup de grace of this Wordpattern Masquerade is on the legal page, where one finds the following:

The Fine Print

All content, code, images, sounds, smells, ambience and the warm fuzzy feeling you get while basking in our glow are Copyright (Q) 1972-1976 The WordPattern Concern. WordPattern™, the WordPattern Logo™, the letters W™ and P™, the colours white™ and black™, and the non-breaking space™ are registered trademarks. The WordPattern Concern does not represent the accuracy or reliability of the information on these so-called “web pages”, after all you can’t believe anything you read on the internets these days.

Things like this make April Fool’s Day worthwhile. But on a more serious bent, why don’t companies make their “serious” web pages this interesting? Would I want to use a company like Huh? for marketing by looking at their website? Maybe, and maybe not, but they would certainly stand out from the crowd, and that’s never a bad thing. Offering serious and quality information about your product is a good thing, certainly, but it can be oh so dull. I would love to see companies manage to fit factual aspects into entertaining text. I mean, when was the last time you READ through the entirety of a corporation’s site because it was entertaining? Yeah, me neither. If we’re going to start talking about aspects of Web 2.1 (beta), I think a defining feature should be humor.

** Mention of “Wordpattern” dates back awhile, at least to January 2005. It appears the original coinage of “Wordpattern” (and Textpress) belong to Jina Bolton, though her post is lost to everything but Google’s cached pages. Her post was in response to this post on Joshuaink. Here’s Google’s cached version (2nd post down) if you’d like to read it. There, I’ve done my snooping for the day.

Categories
internet

An alternative search engine

Gada.be is a handy alternative for anyone looking for a new way to search, or anyone tired of search engines with ulterior (commercial) motives. One neat aspect is that you can search straight from your url bar by typing in your search terms seperated by dashes and followed by .gada.be. For instance, entering in http://sexy-librarian.gada.be will search for posts containing both the words “sexy” and “librarian”. Use dots instead of dashes to perform a phrase search.

Categories
internet news socialweb

The Net’s New Age

The Net’s New Age. Business Week has an interesting if fairly general article on some of the big “Web 2.0″ products in the works from the major companies.

The implications reach far beyond the Net. The new Web is changing the business model for media and communications companies. Traditional players in these markets have built their businesses on a foundation of brand and content, forming a customer base and marketplace. In the Web 2.0 era, they’ll aim to cultivate a community of users on the Web, according to Troy Young, executive vice-president and chief “experience architect” at Organic, an online advertising and consulting firm.

Personally, I’m going to get annoyed if every single website I go to wants me to be part of its “community”, interact with it on a personal basis, and create a profile so it can pander to my tastes. Having the content and tools is great, certainly, so long as function maintains dominance over form, and pages don’t get interactive when they don’t need to be.

Categories
internet socialweb

I think that everyone should include ‘learn to dance’ as a goal

43 Things is social networking in a self-help sort of way. You create a list of 43 things you’d like to accomplish. Simple enough. The neat part is the tagcloud of goals on the front page, allowing you to see the aspirations of people worldwide. If you’re feeling helpful, you can find someone who has a goal that you’ve successfully accomplished, and offer them advice. If you like the concept, check out some of the other things the folks at The Robot Co-op are up to.

Categories
internet poetic

Occasional Loveliness

Tamea doesn’t update her blog very often. Not nearly often enough, really. But when she does, her posts are always very worthwhile.

Categories
internet socialweb

Create your own vlog for free.

Freevlog has a great tutorial for setting up your own vlog (video blog). You too can have your antics pasted all over the internet for the world to see! The world trembles with anticipation, I’m sure. Still, it’s a great tutorial and you should check it out.

Categories
internet news

Come see the softer side of Google

Google Charm makes its debut. Google’s chief executives offer their candid commentary on their growth, prospects, and the controversial China decision. Of course, they maintain some secrets.

That said, however, no-one is exactly sure what Google really wants to do in the future. Speculation among experts is rife about what the company wants with all that dark fibre – but in the end, your guess is as good as mine.

But that’s fine with Google.

“The mystique works to our advantage,” says Eric Schmidt, shaking our hands as we leave the room half an hour late.

Categories
internet socialweb

Del.icio.us.ness.

Work is now over and it is time to go dancing tra la la.

I am hoarding links and hiding them in my del.icio.us.

If you look, you might like some of them.

Ta ta!

Categories
cinema internet

Ex Libris Ahniwa

Yesterday I signed up at Dreamhost for a year of hosting and a new domain. The address is: http://www.exlibrius.org , and will be mostly library-related thoughts, posts, and links. There’s nothing there yet, so don’t bother checking. 🙂

I also bought Mirror Mask and Howl’s Moving Castle.

Mirror Mask is written by Neil Gaiman with art and direction by Dave McKean and puppetry by the Jim Henson company. If you haven’t seen it, you need to go pick it up and watch it.

Howl’s Moving Castle is the latest from Studio Ghibli, who brought us Spirited Away, Nausicaa, My Neighbor Totoro, and about ten other great animated films. Disney is releasing the films in the U.S., and they’re doing a nice job of it. They actually dub the films very well, but also offer a 5.1 Japanese audio track and good subtitles for the purist (I go back and forth).

‘Til next time, it’s time for breakfast! (Yes, I realize it’s late.)
.

Categories
internet poetic

Interesting article on blogging.

For anyone interested in blogging, here is an excellent article from the Financial Times.

Which brings us to the spectre haunting the blogosphere – tedium. If the pornography of opinion doesn’t leave you longing for an eroticism of fact, the vast wasteland of verbiage produced by the relentless nature of blogging is the single greatest impediment to its seriousness as a medium.

Categories
dance internet personal webcomics

OCD, minus C

I can be compulsive, but usually not in a manic fashion. Obsessive? Absolutely. The subjects vary, but the ones that come to mind immediately are:

  • Webcomics.
  • Ideas for websites.
  • Ideas for La Casa.
  • Swing Dancing.
  • Librarianism.
  • Webcomics.

You’ll notice that, sadly, blogging is not on that list. I’d love to be obsessed with blogging, but I’m not sure if it will happen in this current format. My idea, currently (and this does fall into the “Ideas for websites” obsession), is to create a seperate space for purely personal, day-to-day things (probably on livejournal, which seems to cater to the format), and another space for something more of a professional (meaning, subject-oriented) blog. I have some fun ideas for what I’d like to write about, mostly technology, information science, design, librarianism, and webcomics. It would be a fun cross-spectrum for fun people, I think.

I have two other ideas for what I think would be good websites. The nice part is that once set-up they would, for the most part, run themselves. The not-so-nice part is that I really have no clue how to set them up. The ideas and the execution, I think, would be fairly simple. Unfortunately, fairly simple is generally beyond me at the moment when it comes to web design. I’m decent with CSS and for the most part I “understand” things. Understanding does not a good web designer make. Not by itself, in any case. The point? The point is, if you’re good with web design, and might be interested in collaborating with me to get this stuff going, I’m happy to pitch my ideas to you. Understand, they’re not “exciting”. I don’t have the next MySpace lurking in my brain. They’re simple, but I think they’ll work.

Tonight I’m going dancing in Portland. Tomorrow night, to a party in Seattle. Sunday night I may go dancing in Seattle. Monday night, more dancing. Tuesday and Wednesday: dancing. Thursday? Thursdays I crawl into a hole and sleep, or sometimes I go play poker and drink beer. And I wonder why time seems to slip by so quickly … oh wait, no I don’t. The answer is dancing.

Dancing and webcomics. The two best answers out there.

Categories
book internet libraries

World 2.0

The president of the U. of Michigan gave an excellent speech yesterday on Google’s book digitization and its impact on libraries, information, and publishing. (full text)

New technologies and new ideas can generate some pretty scary reactions, and Google Book Search has not been immune. The project, for all that it promises, has been challenged: on the editorial page, across the airwaves, and, with your organization’s endorsement, in the court system.

It is this criticism of the project that prompted me to accept your invitation to speak — and explain why we believe this is a legal, ethical, and noble endeavor that will transform our society.

Legal because we believe copyright law allows us the fair use of millions of books that are being digitized. Ethical because the preservation and protection of knowledge is critically important to the betterment of humankind. And noble because this enterprise is right for the time, right for the future, right for the world of publishing, right for all of us.

Relatedly, a lot of discussion has been happening about “library 2.0”. ACRLog has a good post with lots of links here. Stephen Abram has a post here that covers the spectrum of web 2.0, library 2.0, and the 2.0 world. I guess it’s the 2.0 revolution, hope you brought your mittens.

Categories
internet news socialweb

ePrivacy, iPrivacy, and yPiracy

Consider this a link-dump, if you like. I won’t ramble much myself.

I don’t think it’s that people think of the internet as private, neccesarily, but that they just don’t expect it to be used against them. Or perhaps, that it’s so big that they can be just a face in the crowd. But internet privacy issues are becoming bigger and bigger, from getting google searched at the border, to having your Facebook profile checked by university admissions staff to help determine if they should accept your application.

This Times article highlights the issue of search engine anonymity. Though it clearly states that no “private” information was being proferred, doesn’t it feel like that would just be a matter of time?

“These search engines are a very tempting target for government and law enforcement,” Givens said. “Look at the millions of people who use search engines without thinking of the potential to be drawn into a government drag net.”

I’m not a big fan of facebook (I do have an account), but evidently a lot of people are. This story claims facebook has over 6 million active users, and that over 2/3 of them log on daily. And with stats like that, can you blame a college for “keeping an eye” on their students. Yes, and I think you should. It’s easy for college and university administration to forget that students are what keep them in business. So they had a few drinks, in private. So they “threaten” to commmit a crime. On the internet!? Hell, I’ve threatened to do a lot of things on the internet, but you can bet your ass that if someone “disciplined” me for it, I’d bring a lawsuit down on them with an unholy fury. Should students watch what they post? Perhaps. But maybe the administration should try and respect their privacy a bit too, before they scare all the students away. Because then what will they do?

Hit cancel on the login form and you’ll get two paragraphs of this story, which details students rushing a football field and starting something of a “postgame riot”. Campus police were overwhelmed and only managed a couple arrests, but once again facebook came to the rescue, and through posted photos they managed to finger a whole ton of other students. These students were actually breaking the law, so it makes a bit more sense than the previous example. Yet just another story of Student Beware!

This eweek article highlights the story of an Iranian man and resident of Toronto being stopped from entering the US when border guards found out he was a blogger and so googled his name, finding too much evidence that he had been living, without proper documentation, in New York. His blog post about the experience is interesting. It’s from November 24, 2005, so a little old but very relevant to the issue. Sure, it seems obvious in retrospect, but how would you feel if the border guard not only found your blog, but started to interrogate you about each and every post? I know I’d be outraged.

He was ecstatic. My blog made his day, or in this case, his night. He kept reading my posts and asking questions about a lot of them: Why did I go to Iran, what are my feelings about Bush administration, why I separated from my wife, what did I think about Iranian politics, etc.

From this article:

Now that students have grown accustomed to posting every detail of their lives, from the mundane to the torrid, on their profiles, they need to show a little more restraint. On many profiles, discretion takes a back seat to showing off Thursday night’s killer keg stand or commenting on Friday night’s hook up.

Though I totally love this turnaround by some clever students:

At George Washington University, students took it upon themselves to prove that university police were using the Facebook to find and break up parties. They created a “Beer Party” on the Facebook and waited, digital cameras in hand, for police to arrive. When squad cars rolled up, police found students sipping punch and downing cupcakes frosted with the word “beer.”

And facebook isn’t the only “dangerous” public domain. Myspace is, of course, immensely popular, and got these kids in trouble.

Do a Google news search for facebook right now, and you’ll get 332 articles, at a glance most of them about students getting busted by schools for things they’ve posted on their facebook profiles. While you’re there, try searching myspace as well, or livejournal, blog, typepad, friendster, etc etc etc. The social tools available on the internet today are amazing, and they certainly have their uses. But unless federal law steps in with internet privacy laws, expect the people you would least like to see your blog/profile/photos to see them, and act accordingly. Also, don’t forget that myspace and livejournal both have privacy locks you can put on posts so that not just anyone can read them. Until every service offers similar protection, bear in the mind that at its core, the nature of the internet is that it’s public.

Categories
internet

The Gajillion Dollar Internet $$$

Perhaps the most disturbing thing about The Million Dollar Homepage is how few people have heard of it. This disturbs me because it means that this guy made a $ million, cold, in advertising that your common joe will never see.

The Wiki article expounds that knock-off sites are rampant, but that “the limited success of these imitators may have an impact on its long-term sustainability.” Even so.

This guy has already made over $5000.

Pixel4Jesus has made nearly $70,000. All in the Lord’s name, of course.

And there are a boatload of them. This pixel ads list contains over 1175 pixel advertising sites, and growing. If you average one million pixels per page (as most of them do), and say they run an average of even as low as ten cents per pixel (though I’d assume the average is slightly higher), then that’s $117,500,000 worth of adspace.

In comparisn, The Mile Wall is refreshingly different, if still a very strange beast of an advertising gimmick, and as yet relatively unknown. Since Kottke linked it, I’m sure it will launch into the (internet’s) public eye soon enough. At the least, at $1 per square inch (a square inch being being 5625 pixels by the site’s standards), you’re getting a lot more ad for your money’s worth. At a mile wide and 7″ tall, the guy only stands to make $443,520. We’ll see how that works out for him.

It must be a rough life, taking a blank page in the middle of internet nowhere and turning it into an ad revenue Mecca. Pixel ad sites will be short-lived, but you know this has started a trend of outside-the-box internet ad junkies, who will come up with increasingly weird ways to sell worthless internet space for thousands of dollars.

Personally, I’m jealous as fuck. I’m interested to see where it goes. And I wish I’d thought of it.

Categories
internet poetic school socialweb

Battle of the Megictionaries

Whatever their shortcomings, neither encyclopedia appears to be as error-prone as one might have inferred from Nature, and if Britannica has an edge in accuracy, Wikipedia seems bound to catch up.

Continued here…

In other Wiki news, have you heard about Wikiversity?

The main goal of Wikiversity is not just to impart knowledge but to facilitate learning. The collaborative model of the wiki will be applied to an e-learning framework. This differs significantly from a classic university model, although it does acknowledge the growing acceptance of a social theory of learning in pedagogical and academic practice.

Wikiversity will not prohibit research, though it need not necessarily be a part of every course. In the technical training aspects of its work, its goal is not to discover new things, but to teach things which are already known to new people. At a higher level of education, there will probably have to be some scope for students to do their own research, whether a survey of the literature or of primary research, though this will have to be monitored carefully, and will be dependent on the type of course offered.

Wikiversity does not yet certify student’s mastery. We currently have no way of assuring who is doing the work for a course. We have no way ensuring that every course that would be required for a degree has enough teachers to even attempt it. We attempt to teach the same material many accredited schools do, and to teach the material as well (or better!). But we are not yet an accredited university. There is no guarantee that we will attempt to gain accreditation in the future. It is an open question with diverse opinions within the current community of participants whether accreditation and the ability to award recognized credentials will be useful or effective in the performance of our mission to facilitate free learning. It is already clear that Wikiversity will be a radically different kind of learning platform/environment/resource and its identity and scope will be continually shaped by its students and its practitioners.

Our goal, therefore, is to teach the material to whomever wants to learn it, to the best of our ability and theirs. We set out the materials needed to learn, and set up a framework for collaborative learning and teaching. It is the task of the self selected participants to work towards actual mastery of desired skills sufficient and necessary to pursue personal goals.

And since I don’t remember if I posted this before, it’s a great wiki resource for librarians.

You guessed it, it’s Wiki Wednesday!

Before I said that, I didn’t even know it was an actual phenom.

Categories
humor internet

A tribute to monkeys, eating.

As opposed to being eaten, and to appease Sister Amos, who worries of such occurrences in an obsessive manner.

First off, I found this site. This site is ridiculously awesome. Sure, it’s crass, but so are monkeys. Some gems:

Meteorologists here have forecast a drop in temperatures
after days of severe heat which forced officials to convert local citizens
into ice-cream bars killing dozens of people in the past week.

A Chinese safari park has dyed the fur of its monkeys black, yellow and
white to ring in the Lunar New Year of the Monkey, which started on Thursday.

“We had to anaesthetise them first,” said a worker at the Forest Safari
Park in the city of Shenyang. “That was really hillaroius, we got drunk
and used their unconcious bodies as puppets”.

The Rhinos wouldn’t normally eat meat but they are stupid and
easily tricked.

And with pictures like this, this, and this, you know you’re getting your mon(k)ey’s worth.

I voted for the Monkey King. Twice.

That is all.

Categories
internet

I Love Virals

Say what you will about viral advertising, but I find it much more engaging than the alternative.

More about Origen.

Granted, it will be hard to top “I Love Bees”. But I hope someone tries.